• BeamBrain [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    3 个月前

    Did 4chan move right, or did you just move left? I admit I tend to be skeptical of claims that the site used to be better. They smell of rose-colored glasses to me.

    • SeekTheDeletion [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      3 个月前

      Both are obviously true. But 4chan really did just used to be edgy kids and not outright nazism. There was very little moderation so there was everything, but the really popular boards were like furries, bronies, /b/ and other such weirdos and outcasts and big_bob said. Their comment is largely correct, but even in it’s less reactionary form it was still an unmoderated forum filled with edgy teenagers and bad actors and pedophiles and worst of all, gamers.

    • Owl [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      3 个月前

      I was also there in the early days, and yeah, it was better. The shift started somewhere around 2008 to 2010. During the Bush admin, it was a breath of fresh air to see a place that was anti war, anti evangelical, and pro gay marriage. Of course, they were also horrible edgelords trying to keep the normies out by making their site culture completely toxic.

      • CarbonScored [any]@hexbear.net
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        3 个月前

        This was very much my experience too. There was very little in actual right-wing politics, 4chan got it’s initial reputation because /b/ was the ultimate edgelord place, but even their more popular threads were actually community activities, railing against war and problematic organisations (see: scientology). Pretty much every other board was just a passionate, interested group in their own things.

        I mean I never personally quite vibed with 4chan, but it was entertaining and people there actually cared. I remember a spate of cool MS-Paint-Adventure type threads that got really involved and were super fun. I could absolutely understand making friends there.

        It really was an internet experiment, it was maybe the first one to show that upholding absolute free speech tends to attract too many nazi outcasts from elsewhere, then nazis make it a nazi community. The early internet pre-2008, this was still a valid way to exist as a site, because there were no “main” sites to get banned from for you naziism, it was just billions of small communities (which I still yearn for).

    • KobaCumTribute [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      3 个月前

      I think it has to be taken in the context of what American counter culture has historically been like (run through with chauvinist libertinism absolutely everywhere, even in spaces that broadly held at least some left wing or positive aspects) as well as the state of the left at the time (absolutely dismal, incoherent, and fragmented in a way that makes the sad state of affairs today look good by comparison).

      Like when I was in highschool all the queer outcasts and theater kids were on 4chan, and when I was in college I wound up spending a lot of time on a /tg/ D&D IRC server that one of my old highschool friends invited me to which was run by a gay couple. I can only describe it as that the sort of edgy nihilism and bigotry that ran through 4chan’s culture was just sort of tacitly tolerated at the time even by the targets of it, because that’s just how bad things were back then and that to engage in counter culture at all meant hardening oneself to it and never letting on that it bothered you.

      And then we hit the crystalizing point of gamergate/its surrounding culture war flash points, and at once the chauvinists became militantly worse because instead of just being assholes they now had a unified objective to fight to make things worse by being even more aggressively awful, and at the same time there was a reaction against that and people increasingly stopped putting up with their bullshit and started carving out spaces that were better and less toxic for counter culture.

    • gueybana [any]@hexbear.net
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      3 个月前

      I’ve only ever known 4chan for edgy racist tripe and violent sexual imagery.

      When did this mythical 4chan exist? because I’ve known about the site since ~2010

    • JoeByeThen [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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      3 个月前

      The entire internet shifted during the Obama years. Liberal both sidesing and ‘defend your right to say it’ of racist attacks normalized a lot of the hard white supremacy in popular spaces that during the Bush years were largely quarantined to the real stormfront site.